Welcome to a laptop battery specialist of the Fujitsu Laptop Battery
Fujitsu has launched the LIFEBOOK UH572 Ultrabook sporting the new SlimEdge design with aluminium housing. Powered by the latest 3rd generation Intel Core processors with 8 GB RAM, this laptop has a 13.3" anti-glare screen that should help with better visibility in brightly light environments. A built-in HD camera at the top of the bezel is great for hi-def video chat. Battery life is up to 7.5 hours, which should let you use it comfortably while you take it away for a long duration to your work or college project. At just 0.7", this ultra-slim device weighs just 1.6 kg – very portable indeed! Windows 7 Home or Professional comes pre-installed according to the customer's choice.
Storage is taken care of by SSD and HDD options ranging from 128 GB to 500 GB. Multimedia is via stereo speakers that support DTS Boost, which claims to maximise the acoustic output of the device using proprietary algorithms. Connectivity is provided by WLAN, Bluetooth, and optional 3G \ UMTS. While an RJ-45 port is absent, there is a USB adapter to take care of the wired connectivity option. The company has managed to cram in two SuperSpeed USB 3.0 ports to connect faster peripherals, and a USB 2.0 port that supports charging devices even when the ultrabook is switched off. Here is the complete specifications list:
Price-wise, the Fujitsu LIFEBOOK UH572 Ultrabook is similar to other ultrabooks – they are priced a tad more than laptops. Laptops can do things a lot faster, but at the disadvantage of not being so portable, and having a lower battery such as Fujitsu FPCBP201 Battery , Fujitsu FPCBP202 Battery , Fujitsu FPCBP186 Battery , Fujitsu LifeBook T2010 Battery , Fujitsu LifeBook T2020 Battery , Fujitsu FPCBP206 Battery , Fujitsu FPCBP205 Battery , Fujitsu FPCBP116 Battery , Fujitsu LifeBook A1130 Battery , Fujitsu LifeBook V1020 Battery , Fujitsu FPCBP192 Battery , Fujitsu 644560 Battery life. At an MRP of Rs 65,000, this ultrabook seems to be a good deal going by the looks, but we'll reserve judgment till we get our hands on one.
By the turn of the century the PDA had begun its evolution into the smartphone, but by then the tablet had taken its next big step. At the Comdex expo in autumn 2000 Microsoft used Bill Gates’ annual keynote to announce the tablet PC. This was a full PC running a tablet-specific version of Windows XP. With Microsoft keen on a pen and ‘rich ink’ paradigm, it was stylus controlled, with text entered using a combination of an on-screen keyboard and handwriting recognition. The Tablet PC came bundled with a set of tools and applications to make ink useful within Windows, and packs were added to Microsoft Office to boost ink functionality there. While Microsoft showed off its own prototype, Compaq, Fujitsu, HP, Acer and Toshiba would all adopt the format over the next few years.
Microsoft believed in the Tablet PC. “The PC took computing out of the back office and into everyone’s office,” Gates told his Comdex audience. “The Tablet takes cutting-edge PC technology and makes it available wherever you want it, which is why I’m already using a Tablet as my everyday computer. It’s a PC that is virtually without limits, and within five years I predict it will be the most popular form of PC sold.”
Looking back, we now meet Gates’ words with ridicule, but at the time the Tablet PC seemed revolutionary. And, despite what many suggest, it was not a total failure. It never took off in the boardroom or the home, but it still found use in some corporate scenarios, and manufacturers of ruggedised PCs would take the form factor to industries and mobile workforces where pen input was more useful or reliable than a keyboard. But did the Tablet PC reach the heights that Gates and co imagined? No. By 2005 Tablet PCs made up less than 1.5 per cent of all notebook PCs sold, and less than one per cent of all PCs of any type.